âI need a favor.'
Jerry squinted. âOkay?'
Ray rolled up his pant leg. âCut it off.'
Jerry took Ray into the shop, grabbed his three-foot clippers, cracked the titanium tracking bracelet strangling Ray's ankle. Ray bounced.
âWait.'
âWhat.'
Jerry stuffed two grand into Ray's hand, Ray dropped it, kept going.
âDon't be like that, kid, c'mon. 'Ey, come next week. Maybe I got something for you.'
âNot interested.'
âSomething legit, I mean.'
Ray kept walking. He checked Dad's wallet. Three hundred eighty bucks. He should have taken Jerry's money. âGenius.' He walked to the zoo, waited for it to open, chucked the ankle bracelet into the lions' feeding cage.
He went to a diner to get warm, stuffed himself with pancakes, fries, Coke, fell asleep at the back table. The diner was a dive, empty, and the waitress let him sleep.
Sometime later he felt a hand on his shoulder, jumped, the waitress's hand on the back of his neck. âThe hell?' He jerked away from the waitress. âWhere am I?'
âEl Fogonero.'
âElâthe firefighter?'
âThe diner. That's its name. You shaking. You was talking in you sleep.'
The table was wet from where Ray had rested his head to sleep. He wiped the drool from the table with his sleeve, wiped his mouth.
âYou was crying,' the waitress said.
âI, damn. Sorry.'
âBaby, lemme make you a hot chocolate, bring you some pie. On me.'
âThank you, ma'am.' Ray looked out the window. The bank clock said afternoon. âBut I gotta go.' The waitress went to get the bill. Ray left a hundred-dollar tip under his dirty plate.
Winter covered Ten Mile River in three feet of icy snow. Ray followed the sneaker tracks to the stationhouse, saw the TV flicker, smiled. â
Scarface.
' His smile faded. Turn around. Run.
But then that old feeling came back, a vague memory of the J-man howling.
That laugh.
Ray kicked in the door, dropped his knapsack, pulled a boxer's pose. â'Sup.'
José bounced off the couch. â'Sup.' He punched Ray. âHow was yours?'
Ray punched back. âIt was nothin. Yours?'
âNothin. Ray-Ray. The double Ray. Dag, son, '
sup
?'
â'Sup. Dag, you took off a coupla pounds, huh?'
âPrison food. You put on a few. My boy's huge!'
âPrison food. Place is trashed, huh?'
âAnd here I thought I done a good job cleanin up,' José said.
âPipe heads?'
âThey was too stoned to steal the
Tee
Vee. Knocked it over, got lines in it now.'
âWhen you get free?'
âTwo days back. Kid Ray, back in business!' José jumped Ray.
Ray body slammed José to the couch broken from Ray's fall from the ceiling rafter seven months before. âWhere's the dogs?'
âWhores. They'll be back soon as they smell us cook somethin.'
âYou been back two days and you ain't cooked?'
âCereal. The Capitán. Don't look at me like that. I was waitin for you to cook me somethin.'
âThat sure I'd be back, huh?'
âWhere else you gonna go?'
Ray faked a grin.
âWhere'd you dump your bracelet?' José said.
âLions. You?'
âSmokestack. Yo, c'mere. I gotta show you somethin. Ray, wait'll you see 'em.'
â
Them?
'
José led Ray down to the unheated basement, where two blue bodies hugged.
âGod. Damn,' Ray said. âJesus. Pipe heads you think?'
âShooters, tracks on their arms. Suicide pact, I make it.'
Ray toed the frozen bodies, afraid they might jump up. A man and a woman dead in each other's arms. It was the saddest, filthiest, most beautiful thing he'd ever seen. âHow'd you get 'em down here?'
âThey was down here already.' José grabbed the man's frozen leg and slid him, the two bodies frozen solid, frozen together. Under the man's leg was a shot-out hypodermic needle. The bodies were skinny, young.
âYou been up there two days watching TV, and all the while they were down here?'
âThey dead, son,' José said. âWhat they gonna do to me? It's the livin folks I worry about. What oughta we do with 'em?'
âWe gotta get 'em outta here. Spring comes, they thaw, rats'll come.'
âAnd we got enough pests around here with the roaches, the damn dogs when they come back.' José warmed his hands with his breath. âLet's bag 'em and drag 'em.'
âLike, put 'em in the regular old garbage?'
âNo, in the special garbage. The hell they feed you in that Spofford?'
âAin't right,' Ray said.
âThat's about the stupidest thing I ever heard.'
âLeavin Earth like they done, I gotta give 'em a proper funeral.'
âThat right there is what too much readin gets you, “Leavin Earth.” Son, you don't
gotta
do it. Plus, you got eyes? The river's froze.'
âNot all the way out. In the middle it's open, dammit.'
âYou're jokin, right? He's not jokin. Ray, we get caught draggin human Popsicles onto the river ice, folks are gonna start askin us a thing or two!'
âWe can tarp 'em in the rowboat with the army tent, they'll look like bunched sail, we sled 'em down.'
José rolled his eyes. âGonna be dark soon, moron. Barge'll run us down in the black. Then you got the icebreakers. I don't know about you, kid.'
âI don't know about me either.'
âPunk does six and some months hard time, comes out more a kid than before. A'right then, let's chuck these lovers into the river before the goddam sun sets.'
They covered the bodies with a heavy tarp, pushed their stolen rowboat through the snowy woods to the overpass. Snow fell hard, the wind picking up. A crow swung with the branch it sat. Ten Mile River was empty.
âSnow'll make for a pretty funeral,' Ray said.
â“Pretty funeral.” Idiot. Snow's our cover. Help me push this mess.'
They lugged the boat up the overpass steps. âYou wrote her?' Ray said.
âI'm gonna write her to tell her I'm in jail?'
âBut you kissed her. You can't swap spit with a chick and then just up and disappear. When you find out you're gonna be gone for a long time, you got to write her to tell her you'll be back someday.'
âYou don't gotta tell me what I gotta do, Ray.' José spit. âBesides, my writin is lame. I was embarrassed of her seein I can't spell good.'
âI'm-a school you, startin tomorrow.'
âYou'll school me nothin. Hey?'
âWhat?'
â
You
write her?'
âPsh, I'd go behind m' boy's back like that? Psh, insultin me, man.'
âYou do what you want. Y'all were friends, I don't mind you writin her.'
âAnyway, she ain't the type to call you out on bad spellin. They ain't like us, chicks. They got feelings.'
âTalkin about chicks like he knows a damn thing about 'em.'
They stopped to catch their breath.
âWe oughta go see her,' Ray said.
âI been thinkin about it, believe me, about her, don't think I ain't. Thinkin about you, me, her and her cousin and all, how we was opposed to go on that double date.'
âCousin's long gone by now I bet.' Ray stared at the tarp over the stiffs, remembered their threaded fingers, their legs locked at the hips. He put himself in place of the dead guy and Trini in place of the dead girl, their lips near touching, their eyes at each other, leaving Earth together.
âWake up,' José said.
They set the boat at the head of the down stairway. The clouds rippled like God's shabby sheet strung out to dry, the day dying, the snow, the boat, the boys' faces cast dark blue. âAw hell, duck.' José pulled Ray below the eye line of a snowdrift.
A garbage truck banged up the Drive, kept going.
âPhew,' Ray said.
âToo cold for “phew” today. Goddam thirty degrees out here.'
âYou'd prob'ly still find a way to take off your shirt.'
âWhat's this now?'
âNothin.'
They flanked the boat like bobsledders, gave it a running push, jumped in. Ray hunkered in the bow but José rode the bodies as the boat bombed the overpass steps downhill over the flatlands, skipped the break-water onto the frozen river. The boys pushed from there. A half mile out the icebreakers had gashed the Hudson with a stripe of black water a quarter mile wide. The water was empty with the snowstorm, even the tugs lying low.
âGettin dark fast,' José said. âLet's do this.'
Ray nodded at a buoy locked slantways in the ice traps. âIn case the wind blows the skiff while we're doin the funeral, you wanna moor it to that buoy there so it don't blow off the ice?'
âMoor it?' José said. âNah, grab that rope thing there and tie it to that post thing there on the bell light thing there, in case the wind blows it.'
âThat's what mooring it means.'
âThen
moor
it,' José said.
âAnd the boat rope's called a hawser. The post is a bollard. Theâ'
âRay? I ain't out here for a vocabliary lesson, dig? You say bollard or hawser one more time and I'll leave your learned butt out here on the ice, you can sink the blue people your damn self, I swear it.'
They pushed the boat to the buoy, rocked it to spill the frozen bodies onto the ice. José bunched the tarp, tucked it under the rowboat's bench seat. â
Haw
ser. Like rope ain't a good enough goddam word.'
Ray tied the boat to the buoy and rang the buoy bell.
âQuit messin with that bell, ya goddam bollard. Ringin it to tell the Coast Guard we got two dead folks out on the ice. I can barely see you through the snow. C'mon, Ray, let's git this done. I wanna dump these stiffs and go apologise to my shorty, see if she'll let me put my hand up her shirt.'
Ray looked away.
âAw hell. Dag. Sorry, Ray.'
Ray rang the buoy bell again, just once. âThat hole right there that the hawser's goin through on the boat?'
José squinted. âYou're about to work my last nerve, ain't you?'
âThat's a chock.'
José smacked the back of Ray's head. âGrab the blue feller's foot there and let's drag this mess to the water.'
The sunset split the clouds and lit the river red for a second before it died. The wind gusted, smelled like the water, sweet funk and salt. âLittle warmer out here, huh?' Ray walked right to the edge of the freeze.
âWhen'd you get so balls out all of a sudden?' José said. âCan't look a girl in the eyes but now he's darin death on the ice.'
âHell, I forgot to bring weights to tie round the blue folks' ankles. Now they're gonna float.'
âNah,' José said. âThey're heavy as hell. They'll sink sure enough.'
âThey're frozen, right? Look at all the ice on the river. Ice floats, man.'
âWell then float they will. I ain't goin back for cinderblock now.'
âNext time we gotta remember to bring brick.'
âNext time, huh? Ray, ain't no next time. This is the last river funeral I'm comin to anyways. This is creepy as hell, drownin these dead folks here. Let's go. Let's dump 'em.'
âWait,' Ray said. âShould we say somethin, like a prayer or some damn thing?'
âYou know any goddam prayers? Aw hell. You cryin now, son?'
âHell no,' Ray said. âI got a cold comin.'
âYou don't even know these folks.'
âIt's like this ain't real. Like there's not one real thing left, know what I'm sayin?'
âNo, Ray, I don't know what you're sayin. Fuck it all, will ya look at him now?' José sighed, chucked his arm over Ray's shoulder. âRay, look here. In half a hour we're gonna be watchin the fights on HBO, droppin beers and smokin full-strength Marlboros, okay? Reds. We'll get a pizza each. Now suck it up. C'mon now, bud, it's gettin dark. Let's push 'em in.'
They pushed the bodies off the ice into the river. The bodies plopped, sank, came up stuck together. The tide took them fast north.
âSad, huh?'
âYou kill me, son. You'll be my death. Sad, he says. Like a damn girl. Go untie the boat. I gotta piss.'
His fingers numb, Ray had a hard time digging out the knot.
âYou're cookin me a good dinner tonight for this one, bitch. You owe me big, gettin me out here. And you're cleanin the damn dishes tooâdaggit, look at this mess now.' The wind switched, blew José's pee back at him. He spun west to pee with the wind. â
You're
sad is what's sad.'
Ray popped the slipknot. The wind grabbed the boat, blew it toward the open water. âI got it.' Ray ran after the boat.
âLeave it, son,' José said. âWe'll steal another one. Yo, Ray, let it go!'
Ray dove to the ice, grabbed the hawser line just as the boat was about to hit the water. âLemme ask you somethin, J.'
âAnswer's no.'
Ray stood up, dusted the ice off his pants, took a step over what looked like a healed crack in the ice and said, âIf there's no heaven, you think there's aâ' as he fell through the ice.
The water was black.
The tide slurped Ray out into open river so cold it burned. A slick animal grabbed his legs. Eel?
The blue folks.
âAh!' Ray screamed underwater, regretting the scream for the air it had cost him.
Not the blue folks. José. He pulled Ray upward.
The J-man yelled underwater, then above water as he and Ray broke the surface, ââon't let go of that thing!'
âWhat thing!'
âThe
hawser,
man! In your hand! Gimme that.'